GB2092286A - Direct reduction of iron using coke oven gas - Google Patents

Direct reduction of iron using coke oven gas Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2092286A
GB2092286A GB8201401A GB8201401A GB2092286A GB 2092286 A GB2092286 A GB 2092286A GB 8201401 A GB8201401 A GB 8201401A GB 8201401 A GB8201401 A GB 8201401A GB 2092286 A GB2092286 A GB 2092286A
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Prior art keywords
gas
furnace
reformer
reducing gas
cooling
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GB2092286B (en
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Midrex Corp
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Midrex Corp
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21BMANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
    • C21B13/00Making spongy iron or liquid steel, by direct processes
    • C21B13/0073Selection or treatment of the reducing gases
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21BMANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
    • C21B13/00Making spongy iron or liquid steel, by direct processes
    • C21B13/02Making spongy iron or liquid steel, by direct processes in shaft furnaces
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21BMANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
    • C21B2100/00Handling of exhaust gases produced during the manufacture of iron or steel
    • C21B2100/20Increasing the gas reduction potential of recycled exhaust gases
    • C21B2100/22Increasing the gas reduction potential of recycled exhaust gases by reforming
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21BMANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
    • C21B2100/00Handling of exhaust gases produced during the manufacture of iron or steel
    • C21B2100/40Gas purification of exhaust gases to be recirculated or used in other metallurgical processes
    • C21B2100/44Removing particles, e.g. by scrubbing, dedusting
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C21METALLURGY OF IRON
    • C21BMANUFACTURE OF IRON OR STEEL
    • C21B2100/00Handling of exhaust gases produced during the manufacture of iron or steel
    • C21B2100/60Process control or energy utilisation in the manufacture of iron or steel
    • C21B2100/66Heat exchange
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P10/00Technologies related to metal processing
    • Y02P10/10Reduction of greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions
    • Y02P10/134Reduction of greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions by avoiding CO2, e.g. using hydrogen
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P10/00Technologies related to metal processing
    • Y02P10/10Reduction of greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions
    • Y02P10/143Reduction of greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions of methane [CH4]

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Manufacture Of Iron (AREA)
  • Industrial Gases (AREA)
  • Hydrogen, Water And Hydrids (AREA)
  • Catalysts (AREA)

Description

1
GB 2 092 286 A 1
SPECIFICATION
Direct reduction of iron using coke oven gas
This invention relates to a process and apparatus for the direct gaseous reduction of iron oxides.
The direct reduction of iron oxide, in such forms as agglomerated pellets or lump ore, to metallic iron 5 in the solid state has in recent years become a commercial reality in many direct reduction plants throughout the world. The combined annual capacity of these plants currently in operation or under construction is in excess of 15 million metric tons of direct reduced iron product which is used primarily as feedstock for electric art steelmaking furnaces. The world demand for additional direct reduced iron is projected to increase at a substantial rate for many years to satisfy a growing world need for such 10 feedstock, as additional electric arc furnace steelmaking plants are constructed.
The majority of the commercial plants producing direct reduced iron utilize natural gas in the manufacture of reductant. The natural gas is reformed to produce the reductants CO and H2. The most energy efficient and most productive of the commercial natural gas based direct reduction plants are the Midrex plants which include continuous catalytic reforming of natural gas using as reforming oxidants 15 the C02 and residual water vapor in cooled, recycled, spent reducing gas from the reduction furnace, as taught in U.S. Patent No. 3,748,120.
It is well recognized in the art of catalytic reforming of natural gas that it is essential to maintain a very low level of sulfur in the gas mixture being reformed, in order to avoid sulfur poisoning of the catalyst. The maximum sulfur level which can be tolerated in the reforming, without poisoning the 20 catalyst, is approximately 2 to 3 parts per million by volume (ppmv) in the gas mixture being reformed. To achieve this very low level of sulfur often requires complicated and expensive desulfurization of the gas before it can be utilized as process fuel.
Coke oven gas is available as a fuel in many of the industrial countries of the world. However, coke oven gas includes certain sulfur containing components such as COS and thiophene. 25 The present invention is an improvement to the direct reduction process taught in U.K. Application
No. 80—33750 (published under No. 2 062 686) in which process,fuel is desulfurized in the reduction furnace by reacting the sulfur in the process fuel with hot direct reduced iron before the process fuel is admitted to the reformer. Sulfur in the process fuel is transferred to the iron during the reduction process, permitting sulfur levels as high as 400 ppmv in the process fuel to be tolerated without adding 30 an undesirable amount of sulfur to the direct reduced iron product. This in-situ desulfurization of the process fuel makes practical, in the direct reduction of iron, the use of process fuels which are very difficult to desulfurize externally such as coke oven gas or natural gas which contains organic sulfur compounds.
The said U.K. Patent Application No. 80—33750 teaches pre-heating of process gas in a process 35 ' gas heater and reforming of spent top gas to reducing gas in a reformer. According to the present disclosure, spent top gas is desulfurized by passing it through the cooling zone as cooling gas, and process gas is preheated by indirect heat exchange with reformer flue gas. This results in a more fuel-efficient process.
The invention as particularly disclosed herein provides a highly efficient apparatus for the direct 40 reduction of iron utilizing reforming of hydrocarbon-containing gaseous process fuel to produce reducing gas, in which the process fuel is desulfurized in the reduction process prior to being reformed. Moreover the apparatus is particularly well adapted for the use of gaseous process fuels which contain organic sulfur compounds.
The invention will be better understood from the following non-limiting description of examples 45 thereof given with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:—
Figure 1 is a diagrammatic illustration of the preferred embodiment of the invention.
Figure 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of an alterantive embodiment of the invention.
Referring now to the drawing, a refractory-lined couterflow shaft type reduction furnace is indicated generally at 10. Iron oxide feed material 12, in the form of oxide pellets, natural lump ore, or a 50 mixture of pellets and lump ore having a nominal particle size in the range of 5 to 30 mm, is introduced to a feed hopper 14 and into the furnace through a feed pipe 16 to establish a burden 17 within the furnace. Particulate direct reduced iron product is withdrawn from the lower region of the furnace through a furnace discharge pipe 18 by a discharge conveyor 20, the speed of which controls the rate of descent of the burden 17 through furnace 10.
55 The middle region of furnace 10 is provided with a hot reducing gas inlet pipe 22 leading to a plurality of gas inlet ports 24 arranged in the furnace refractory wall. A hot pre-reducing gas inlet pipe 26 is provided leading to a plurality of gas inlet ports 28 arranged in the furnace refractory wall at an elevation above ports 24. Hot pre-reducing gas, which consists of a mixture of hot reformed reducing gas and hot process fuel gas, introduced through ports 28 flows inwardly, then upwardly in counterflow 60 relationship to the descending burden. The hot reducing gas from ports 24, in its upward flow, initially fills the entire cross-section of the burden and then is forced to converge toward the centre region of the burden at about the elevation of ports 28 due to the flow of hot pre-reducing gas through ports 28. In the upper region of the furnace the two gas streams merge and fill the entire cross-section of the burden then exit the burden at stockline 30 and leave the furnace through top gas outlet pipe 32. This top gas is
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
2
GB 2 092 286 A 2
a mixture of spent reducing gas and process fuel gas.
The lower region of furnace 10 is provided with a cooling gas circuit for cooling the direct reduced iron prior to discharge.
Top gas leaving furnace 10 through outlet pipe 32 is cooled and scrubbed of dust in a cooler-5 scrubber 34 and withdrawn into pipe 36. The gas is divided into two streams. The first stream of cooled 5 top gas flows into the cooling gas circuit via pipe 38. This cooling circuit includes a cooling gas blower 40 in pipe 38, a cooling gas inlet 42 leading to a cooling gas distributing member 44 within furnace 10, a cooling gas collecting member 46 positioned above the distributing member within the furnace, a cooling gas outlet 48, and an external gas cooler-scrubber 50. Cooled cleaned gas exits cooler-scrubber 10 50 through pipe 51, then is admitted to a plurality of heat resisting alloy reformer tubes 52, one of 10
which is shown in the drawing. Each reformer tube 52 is filled with refractory lump at the tube entry region and the remaining major portion is filled with nickel or cobalt reforming catalyst indicated generally as 54. The reformer tubes are enclosed in a refractory lined reformer furnace 56 having a plurality of burners 58, only one of which is shown, and a flue pipe 60 for venting the spent burner 15 combustion gases from the reformer furnace. A portion of the cooled top gas from pipe 36, together 15-with fuel from an external source 62 is admitted to each burner through pipe 64. Flue pipe 60 communicates with two heat exchangers 66 and 68, in series. Pipe 70, which passes through heat exchanger 66, connects a source of combustion air 72 to burner 58. Process fuel gas from source 75 passes through heat exchanger 68. Heated process fuel gas is admitted to reduction furnace 10 via 20 pipes 82 and 84 and pre-reducing gas inlet 26. 20
The first, usually the major, portion of the hot gas leaving reformer tubes 52 is delivered to the hot reducing gas inlet 22, as the hot reformed reducing gas, via pipes 87 and 90. A second, usually minor,
portion of the hot gas leaving reformer tubes 52 passes through pipe 92 and valve 94, then is mixed with heated process fuel gas in pipe 84 and this mixture becomes the hot pre-reducing gas admitted to 25 furnace 10 at iniet 26. 25
The temperature of the process fuel gas must be at least about 600°C. The process fuel gas must be heated to a sufficiently high temperature that a mixture of process fuel gas and hot reformed reducing gas will have a sufficiently high temperature to carry out the direct reduction of iron oxide.
In its broadest concept the invented process includes the complete mixing of the sulfur-containing 30 process fuel gas, such as coke oven gas, natural gas or blast furnace gas, with the hot reformed 30
reducing gas to form a reducing gas mixture. This mixture is then introduced to the reducing zone of the furnace through a single bustle and tuyere system. This process can be performed with the apparatus shown in the drawing merely by the closing of valve 100 in pipe 84.
In the art of desulfurization of fuel gases such as natural gas, blastfurnace gas or coke oven gas, 35 there are numerous well-established commercial processes for removing H2S (hydrogen sulfide) from 35 such gases in a single desulfurization step. However, the removal of COS (carbonyl sulfide) and organic • sulfur compounds such as thiophene (C4H4S) require the use of complicated and expensive multi-stage desulfurization processes to hydrogenate and convert the sulfur compounds to H2S before these forms of sulfur can be removed.
40 It has recently been discovered that COS and organic sulfur compounds can be removed from 40
gases by reaction with hot direct reduced iron pellets in the presence of hydrogen. The direct reduced iron is not effective at low temperatures for removal of these sulfur compounds, but is effective at temperatures of ab^t 700°C and higher. The exact mechanism of this sulfur removal is not known, but it is believed that the hot direct reduced iron becomes an effective catalyst for conversion of these 45 sulfur compounds in the presence of hydrogen, to H2S, which then chemically reacts with the iron. In 45 any event, the sulfur is transferred from the gas to the direct reduced iron.
Therefore, the gas mixture introduced to inlet 26 must be above about 700°C for sulfur removal.
Higher temperatures are usually preferred, however, as at least about 800°C is needed for direct reduction of the iron oxide. Some pellets cluster at 800°C, so they must be reduced at lower 50 temperatures. A practical lower limit for the temperature of the gas to inlet 22 is thus 750°C. 50
The following is a specific example of the present invention, utilizing sulfur-containing coke oven gas as the process fuel gas. The sulfur level selected for the coke oven gas in this example is 200 ppmv which is a sulfur level commonly achieved by a simple single step desulfurization process. Gas with this level of sulfur although unuseable as a process fuel for reforming, is very acceptable as a burner fuel. 55 In the specific example of this invention, and referring to the drawings, hot reducing gas from the 55
reformer tubes 52 is admitted to the reduction furnace at inlet 22 at a temperature of about 900°C. Hot pre-reducing gas, which is a mixture of 900°C gas from the reformer tubes and 750°C coke oven gas from heat exchanger 68, is admitted to the reduction furnace at inlet 26 at a temperature of about 800°C. The reduction furnace design provides for a furnace burden residence time of about 4 hours 60 from the stockline 30 to ports 28, and 6 hours from stockline 30 to ports 24, which insures that a high 60 degree of direct reduction of the iron oxide to metallic iron is achieved in the pre-reduction zone above ports 28, with the final degree of direct reduction being achieved in the reduction zone between ports 24 and ports 28.
In the pre-reduction zone, the reductants CO and H2 in the hot pre-reducing gas and in the hot 65 reducing gas flowing up from the final reduction zone reduce the iron oxide feed material to a degree of 65
3
GB 2 092 286 A 3
metallization of about 94 percent. Based upon both laboratory tests and commercial experience, the methane present in the pre-reduction gas from the coke oven gas does not crack to any significant degree in its passage through the pre-reduction zone at 800°C because hydrogen is already present in the gas. Thus, the spent reducing gas or top gas exiting from the furnace burden at the stockline and 5 from the furnace gas outlet pipe 32 contains unreacted reductants CO and H2, oxidants C02 and H20 5 vapor formed in the reduction process, and methane. In the top gas cooler-scrubber 34, a major portion of the H20 vapor is condensed out of the top gas. The majority of the dewatered and scrubbed top gas exiting scrubber 34 is passed via line 38 to compressor 40 and into the cooling zone via the cooling gas inlet ports 44. The cool gas passes upwards in counterflow heat exchange with the descending burden 10 of metallic iron and cools the iron to essentially ambient temperature before exiting the top of the 10
cooling zone at 48. The descending burden of metallic iron reacts with any H2S which is contained in the coolilng gas either as residual H2S from the process fuel gas or H2S liberated during the early stages of reduction of a sulfur-bearing iron oxide and effectively desulfurizes the gas. The desulfurized gas is cooled and scrubbed in scrubber 50 and is a gas mixture suitable for reforming in reformer tubes 52 to 15 produce hot fresh reducing gas. In the reformer tubes, the C02 and residual water vapor in the cooled 15 and scrubbed top gas serve as the reforming oxidants for the methane, as is set forth in U.S. Patent No. 3,748,120.
The following tables show the results of a comprehensive process analysis of the invented process and are keyed to the drawing. These data are to be understood as being merely illustrative and in no 20 way limiting. All of the tabulations are based on one metric ton of direct reduced iron product, having a 20 degree of metallization of 92 percent and a carbon content of 1.5 percent. These are widely accepted commercial standards for direct reduced iron produced in natural gas based direct reduction plants.
Table I shows the fuel input required for the process. Coke oven gas has a higher heating value of 4618 kCal/Nm3.
TABLE I
Fuel Input
Process Fuel Gas 2.82 Gcal
Reformer Burners 0.05
Total Fuel Requirement 2.87 Gcal (HHV)
Table II shows the gas flows in the process in normal cubic meters per hour at the indicated locations on the drawing.
TABLE II
Gas
Location
Flow Rate
From Reformer
87
1320
To Lower Inlets
90
922
Reformed Gas To Upper Inlets
92
398
Heated Process Fuel Gas
82
609
Gas Mixture To Upper Inlets
84
1007
Reacted Top Gas
32
1901
Recycle Gas
36
1525
Gas Feed To Reformer
51
1085
Recycle Gas to Reformer Burner
64
440
Table III shows the gas analyses in percent at the locations indicated.
4
GB 2 092 286 A 4
TABLE III
Sulfur
Gas
Location
CO
C02
h2
H20
CH4
n2
(ppm)
Reformed Gas
87
32.9
2.5
51.5
5.1
1.9
6.2
Process Fuel Gas
82
6.8
1.8
54.3
3.0
28.7
5.4
200
To Upper Inlets
84
17.1
2.1
53.2
3.8
18.1
5.7
121
Top Gas
32
13.4
12.4
34.3
23.4
10.5
6.0
Cleaned Recycle Gas
36
16.7
15.5
42.7
4.5
13.1
7.5
Approximately 0.018 percent sulfur is added to the metallized iron product by the sulfur transfer from the process fuel gas. This is below the acceptable limit of 0.03 percent for use of direct reduced iron in electric arc furnace steelmaking.
5 In the example shown, approximately 98.3% of the fuel gas consumed is required to carry out the 5
reduction process; the remaining 1.7% is used for heating. Additional heat exchangers may be added to recover more residual heat from the reformer flue gas to preheat the process gas feed to the reformer.
This will further decrease the fuel required for heating to the extent that gaseous fuel of about 2200 kCal/Nm3 heating value may be exported for use elsewhere. For example, in the present invention, when
10 natural gas rather than coke oven gas is utilized as the process fuel gas, the required volumetric quantity 10 of the natural gas will be approximately one-half that of coke oven gas due to the almost twice calorific value of the natural gas. This will enable the natural gas to contain approximately 400 ppmv of sulfur without adding an excessive amount of sulfur to the iron product.
Process fuel gases such as coke oven gas and naphtha vapor contain unsaturated hydrocarbons
15 which can present carbon deposition problems in catalytic reforming. The present process; in addition to 15 desulfurizing the process fuel gas, also serves to convert such unsaturated hydrocarbons into methane or other saturated hydrocarbon in the reduction furnace prior to the reforming and thus avoids carbon deposition problems during reforming.
Alternative embodiments
20 As shown in Figure 2, heat exchangers 66 and 68 can be arranged in parallel rather than in series. 20
Flue pipe 60 feeds both spent gas combustion pipes 60-A and 60-B which are connected to heat exchangers 66 and 68 respectively.
As a second alternative, the heat exchangers of Figure 1 can be reversed, heating the combustion air first, then heating the process fuel gas, but the Figure 1 arrangement is preferred.

Claims (13)

25 CLAIMS 25
1. Apparatus for direct reduction of iron oxides to a metallized iron product, including:
(a) a generally vertical shaft furnace;
(b) means for charging particulate iron oxide material to the upper portion of said furnace to form a burden therein, and means for removing metallized iron product from the bottom of said furnace,
30 whereby a continuous gravitational flow of said burden can be established through the furnace; 30
(c) a first reducing gas inlet intermediate the end of the furnace;
(d) a second reducing gas inlet intermediate said first reducing gas inlet and the upper end of the furnace;
(e) a reacted gas outlet at the upper end of said furnace;
35 (f) means communicating with said reacted gas outlet for cooling and scrubbing reacted gas; 35
(g) a reformer furnace with catalyst containing tubes therein for the formation of gaseous reductants, said reformer having an outlet communicating with said first and second reducing gas inlet;
(h) a source of process fuel gas; and
40 (i) a process fuel gas pipe communicating with said second reducing gas inlet and said source of 40
process fuel gas; characterised in that:
(i) the reformer gas has at least one burner therein for heating said catalyst-containing tubes and a spent combustion gas pipe for removing spent combustion gases from said furnace; and
(ii) the spent combustion gas pipe communicates with a heat exchanger, said heat
45 exchanger also communicating with said process fuel gas pipe whereby process fuel gas passes 45
through and is preheated in said heat exchanger.
2. Apparatus according to claim 1 further comprising a second heat exchanger, a spent combustion gas pipe communicating with said second heat exchanger, said second heat exchanger communicating with a source of combustion air for said reformer furnace burner whereby combustion
5
GB 2 092 286 A 5
air is preheated and the temperature of spent combustion gases reduced.
3. Apparatus according to claim 1 or 2 further comprising means intermediate said first reducing gas inlet and the bottom of said furnace for cooling the metallized pellet product.
4. Apparatus according to claim 1, 2 or 3 further comprising a passageway communicating with
5 said cooling and scrubbing means and with said cooling means for introducing cooling gas to said 5
cooling zone.
5. Apparatus according to claim 4 further comprising a passageway communicating with a gas outlet of said cooling zone, and a second cooler scrubber for cleaning spent cooling gas and a second passageway communicating with said second cooler scrubber and the inlet to said catalyst-containing
10 tubes in said reformer furnace. 10
6. Apparatus according to claim 1 further comprising a passageway communicating with said cleaning and cooling means and said burner in said reformer furnace for delivering clean spent top gas to said burner as fuel for said reformer furnace.
7. Apparatus for the direct reduction of iron oxides substantially as hereinbefore described with
15 reference to and illustrated in Figure 1 or Figure 2 of the accompanying drawings. 15
8. A process for the direct reduction of iron oxides to a metallised iron product in which particulate iron oxide material is charged to the upper region of a generally vertical shaft furnace to form a gravitationally descending burden therein, in which a reducing gas is fed into the furnace at a first inlet in an intermediate region of the furnace, the reducing gas having been formed by reacting a
20 hydrocarbon and an oxidant in one or more directly-heated catalyst-containing tubes of a reformer 20 furnace, and in which reducing gas mixed with process fuel gas is fed into the furnace at a region above the first inlet, characterised in that some of the spent reducing gas (herein also called top gas) removed from an upper region of the furnace is desulphurised by being passed through a lower region of the furnace and in that process fuel gas from a source thereof is heat exchanged with the products of
25 combustion emanating from the reformer furnace, prior to being mixed with the reducing gas. 25
9. A process according to claim 8 in which the process fuel gas is one which contains organic sulphur compounds.
10. A process according to claim 8 or 9 in which a further part of the spent reducing gas is fed to one or more burners of the reformer furnace.
30
11. A process according to claim 8, 9 or 10 in which all the process fuel gas employed is passed 30
through the reduction furnace in admixture with reducing gas prior to being fed to the reformer burner or burners or the reformer tube or tubes as the case may be.
12. A process according to any one of claims 8—11 in which air is fed to the reformer burners and is heat exchanged with the hot products of combustion from the reformer furnace prior to being so fed.
35
13. A process substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as illustrated in Figure 35
1 or Figure 2 of the accompanying drawings.
Printed for Her Majesty's Stationery Office by the Courier Press, Leamington Spa, 1982. Published by the Patent Office, 25 Southampton Buildings, London, WC2A 1AY, from which copies may be obtained.
GB8201401A 1981-01-29 1982-01-19 Direct reduction of iron using coke oven gas Expired GB2092286B (en)

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DE (1) DE3202220A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2498628B1 (en)
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CN104245963B (en) 2011-12-21 2016-11-16 伊尔技术有限公司 Utilize the method and apparatus that oven gas prepares DRI (DRI)
CN103103305B (en) * 2013-03-05 2014-07-30 周广砥 Alkane-heating type reduction sponge iron shaft furnace
US9970071B2 (en) * 2014-09-23 2018-05-15 Midrex Technologies, Inc. Method for reducing iron oxide to metallic iron using coke oven gas
CN113501494A (en) * 2021-07-07 2021-10-15 山西晋南钢铁集团有限公司 Self-reforming system and method for coke oven gas for blast furnace iron making
CN114249548B (en) * 2021-12-15 2022-11-08 广西柳州钢铁集团有限公司 Method for stably blending fuel in gas double-hearth kiln
CN115354148B (en) * 2022-07-22 2023-11-28 重庆赛迪热工环保工程技术有限公司 Cooling system and method for metallized pellets of rotary hearth furnace
CN115449580A (en) * 2022-08-31 2022-12-09 河北张宣高科科技有限公司 Zero-carbon-emission direct reduction system and process completely adopting coke oven gas

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US3905806A (en) * 1973-02-20 1975-09-16 Armco Steel Corp Method for the direct reduction of iron ores
AU496945B2 (en) * 1975-05-19 1978-11-16 Midrex International B.V. Rotterdam Producing metallized product
CH619736A5 (en) * 1976-01-27 1980-10-15 Max Geisseler Process and equipment for producing metal sponge in a shaft furnace by means of hydrogen-rich reducing gases
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US4270739A (en) * 1979-10-22 1981-06-02 Midrex Corporation Apparatus for direct reduction of iron using high sulfur gas

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KR850001644B1 (en) 1985-11-06
IT8219295A0 (en) 1982-01-26
JPS57143413A (en) 1982-09-04
FR2498628A1 (en) 1982-07-30
YU18782A (en) 1984-12-31
DE3202220A1 (en) 1982-08-26
GB2092286B (en) 1984-09-19
TR21571A (en) 1984-10-07
US4351513A (en) 1982-09-28
CS224640B2 (en) 1984-01-16
BR8200350A (en) 1982-11-23
KR830009227A (en) 1983-12-19
RO84193B (en) 1984-07-30
HU189558B (en) 1986-07-28
BE891920A (en) 1982-05-17
AT388389B (en) 1989-06-12
LU83905A1 (en) 1982-07-07
ZA82297B (en) 1982-12-29
AU7917982A (en) 1982-08-05
JPS6014085B2 (en) 1985-04-11
RO84193A (en) 1984-05-23
IT1150606B (en) 1986-12-17
DD202181A5 (en) 1983-08-31
AU535416B2 (en) 1984-03-22
ATA29282A (en) 1988-11-15
FR2498628B1 (en) 1987-01-09
IN156294B (en) 1985-06-15

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